This invention relates to an article of footwear. In particular, this invention relates to an article of footwear having multiple components which can be removed or replaced as desired.
Footwear often serves a functional role related to a particular activity. One of the most well-known examples of footwear function is protection of a wearer's feet from the external environment. In particular, people wear shoes to protect the bottoms of their feet from the surface over which they walk. Footwear may also provide added traction as a wearer walks, support for a wearer's foot, warmth, etc. Footwear often serves these and other functions in varying degrees. For example, a person may need a relatively rugged shoe when walking outside, but only need a light slipper when walking inside.
Because of the many functions that footwear serves, people often have multiple pairs of shoes designed for use in different circumstances. This is can be inconvenient. If a person expects to encounter various environments for which different shoe types may be appropriate, that person may be forced to carry one or more pairs of shoes in addition to the shoes he or she may presently be wearing.
As in many fields, manufacturing presents many challenges in the footwear arts. As indicated above, a shoe often needs a rugged surface in the outsole region so as to support the wearer's foot, to provide traction and/or for durability. However, it is frequently desirable that other parts of a shoe be softer and more compliant. Because of these different requirements, shoes are often fabricated from multiple types of materials. These diverse materials are usually joined in some manner, e.g., stitching, gluing, etc. Joining different component types often requires additional manufacturing steps. Reducing the number of joining operations reduces manufacturing steps, thereby reducing cost.
Disposal of worn-out shoes is another challenge in the footwear arts. At the end of a shoe's life cycle, joined components must often be separated. In particular, the different materials used to construct a shoe often have differing recycling requirements. Separating components that have been glued, stitched or otherwise bonded adds to the inconvenience and expense of recycling. When recycling is not convenient, some persons will simply dispose of shoes with non-recycled refuse. If a shoe could be more easily separated into components, people will be encouraged to recycle that shoe.
The present invention addresses the above and other challenges. In at least one embodiment, the invention includes a shoe having several components. The wearer may separate these components and then recombine some or all of these components as desired. In one embodiment, the invention includes an article configured for placement on a foot of a human wearer. The article includes a flexible cover shaped to envelope at least a portion of the wearer's foot. The cover has a sole region with opposing inner and outer surfaces, with the inner surface positioned to face the sole of the wearer's foot. The cover also has a plurality of apertures formed in the sole region. The article further includes a removable outsole nested within the cover. The outsole has opposing upper and lower surfaces, with the lower surface facing the inner sole region surface. The outsole also has a plurality of lugs on the lower surface that protrude into the plurality of apertures.
In another embodiment, the invention also includes an article configured to be placed on the foot of a human wearer. This embodiment also includes a flexible cover shaped to envelope at least a portion of the foot and having a sole region. The cover further has an upper region attached to the sole region and positioned to cover at least a portion of the top and sides of the foot. A plurality of apertures are formed in the sole and upper regions. The embodiment includes a removable outsole nested within the cover and having opposing upper and lower surfaces, as well as a plurality of lugs on the lower surface which protrude into a portion of the plurality of apertures in the cover. The embodiment further includes a removable slipper nested within the cover and having a sole and an upper, the slipper sole facing the upper outsole surface.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be readily apparent and fully understood from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments, taken in connection with the appended drawings.
The foregoing summary of the invention, as well as the following detailed description of preferred embodiments, is better understood when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, which are included by way of example, and not by way of limitation with regard to the claimed invention.
Embodiments of the invention address many of the challenges discussed above. In at least one embodiment, the invention includes a shoe having multiple components that are separable by the wearer. The wearer may then combine some or all of these components as the wearer chooses. In one embodiment, the shoe has a one-piece flexible outer covering that surrounds a wearer's foot and removably contains other shoe components. One of those components is an outsole, which slips inside the covering and rests in a sole region of the covering. An inner slipper component also fits within the covering, and rests upon the outsole. An insole component may also be inserted inside the covering, either within the slipper or between the slipper and the outsole.
To facilitate understanding of the invention, different types of shading are used for various components of shoe 10 in the drawings. In particular, cage 12 is shown throughout the drawings without shading. Slipper 14 is shown throughout the drawings with a mesh pattern such as is sometimes used in other contexts to indicate a fabric surface. Outsole 16 is shown throughout the drawings with stippling. The stippling and mesh shading are added for purposes of more clearly distinguishing between components in the figures. The shading is not intended to imply limitation upon the surface texture of, or on the material that may be used to fabricate, any of these components.
In at least some embodiments, cage 12 is a formed from a material which is sufficiently flexible to permit cage 12 to slip over a wearer's foot, yet sufficiently durable to withstand repeated contact with a hard surface over which a wearer may walk. In at least one embodiment, cage 12 is molded from thermoplastic polyurethane (e.g., DESMOPAN 9370 AU available from Bayer Corporation of Pittsburgh, Pa.). In some embodiments, the sole region of cage 12 is slightly thicker than the upper region (i.e., the portion of cage 12 covering the sides and top of a wearer's foot). In one embodiment, cage 12 has a thickness ranging from about 1.5 mm to about 2.0 mm in the side and upper regions, and a thickness of about 2.0 mm to about 2.5 mm in the sole region. The thickness(es) of cage 12 varies in other embodiments. In the embodiment shown, cage 12 has circular apertures 22 formed over most of its surface. In at least some embodiments, the size of the apertures ranges from about 5.0 mm in diameter to about 15.0 mm in diameter. In other embodiments, the diameters of the apertures range from about 4.5 mm to about 13.5 mm, while in other embodiments the diameters of the apertures range from about 5.5 mm to about 16.5 mm. Still other embodiments may have other sized apertures. In various embodiments, the sole region of cage 12 has between about 90 and about 95 apertures. In other embodiments, cage 12 may have about 80 to about 86 apertures in the sole region, while other embodiments may have about 99 to about 105 apertures in the sole region. Still other embodiments may have other numbers of sole region apertures. Similarly, the upper region of cage 12 has between about 230 and about 235 apertures in various embodiments. In other embodiments, cage 12 may have about 207 to about 212 apertures in the upper region, while still other embodiments may have about 253 to about 259 apertures in the upper region. Yet other embodiments may have other numbers of upper region apertures. In some embodiments, and as shown in
As indicated above, lugs 20 may have other shapes and/or sizes in other embodiments.
As seen in
In at least one embodiment, outsole 16 is molded from a wear-resistant material such as compression-molded rubber. Preferably, outsole 16 is formed from a single material. In certain embodiments, however, outsole 16 may be formed from multiple materials (e.g., a more wear-resistant material could be used for the ground-contacting tips of lugs 20 and a more pliable material used for other portions of the outsole). In at least one embodiment, insole 18 is molded from polyurethane.
Various combinations of cage 12, outsole 16, slipper 14 and insole 18 provide a wearer with footwear suitable for different circumstances. In one configuration shown in
In the configuration of
In the configuration of
In some embodiments, some or all of the components of shoe 10 are fabricated so as to facilitate recycling at the end of the shoe's useful life. Specifically, cage 12 is made from a first material (or combination of materials with similar recycling requirements) and outsole 16 is made from a second material (or combination of materials with similar recycling requirements). Insole 18 is also made from a single material (or combination of materials with similar recycling requirements), which may or may not be the same as that of outsole 16. In some embodiments, slipper 14 may also be formed from a single material or from a combination of materials with similar recycling requirements. In this manner, the components of shoe 10 can be readily separated for recycling. In other embodiments, one or more of cage 12, slipper 14, outsole 16 and insole 18 is made from multiple materials which may not have similar recycling requirements.
As previously indicated, each component may be manufactured in a variety of alternate embodiments. For example, embodiments of shoe 10 intended for lighter uses (and/or certain wearer preferences) could include a cage 12 formed from a first material that is more flexible and less wear resistant than would an embodiment intended for more rugged use (and/or other wearer preferences). Similarly, outsole 16 could be manufactured from a softer material for certain intended uses and/or wearer preferences, and/or have lugs that are smaller, shorter and/or less numerous. For more rugged conditions (and/or other wearer preferences), outsole 16 could be made from harder material and/or have larger, higher and/or more numerous lugs. Insole 18 could also be made from multiple materials depending upon the intended use(s) of the shoe or wearer preference (e.g., some wearers may prefer a softer insole, while others may prefer a harder insole). Different shapes (e.g., orthotic surfaces to closely support the foot) could also be incorporated. Slipper 14 could be made from a thinner, more lightweight material for warm weather uses, from a thicker and/or warmer material for cold weather uses, from more durable material if the shoe will primarily be worn outdoors, from a less durable but more stylish material if the shoe will predominantly be worn indoors, from different materials based on wearer preferences, etc. Cage 12, outsole 16 and/or insole 18 may be transparent, translucent or opaque, and may be manufactured in different colors. Similarly, slipper 14 may also be manufactured in a variety of colors.
Because the various components of shoe 10 can be removed and recombined as desired, components from different shoes can be further combined. For example, a person may own one pair of shoes 10 having a thicker cage 12 with no apertures in the upper, an outsole 12 with relatively long lugs, and a slipper that is made from a cold weather material. The person may then own another pair of shoes 10 having a thinner cage 12 with apertures in the upper, an outsole 12 with shorter lugs, and a slipper made from warm weather material. The person could then combine various components from the two pairs to obtain an even more specialized pair of shoes. Similarly, a person owning pairs of shoes 10 in different colors could mix components from the pairs to obtain different color combinations.
While particular embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, it is recognized that various modifications thereof will occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the scope of the herein-described invention shall be limited solely by the claims appended hereto.
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